Mid-Century Modern PP501 The Chair by Hans Wegner. New product.

€ 5,106.00 Incl. VAT (from)

Mid-Century Modern PP501 The Chair by Hans Wegner. New product. *Required step

Soaped ash Soaped ash
+ € 102.00
White oiled ash White oiled ash
+ € 270.00
Oiled oak Oiled oak
+ € 168.00
White oiled oak White oiled oak
+ € 168.00
Soaped oak Soaped oak
+ € 54.00
Clear bio oiled cherry Clear bio oiled cherry
+ € 774.00
Oiled walnut Oiled walnut
+ € 1,884.00
 
Remix 982 Remix 982
Remix 962 Remix 962
Remix 954 Remix 954
Remix 942 Remix 942
Remix 933 Remix 933
Remix 923 Remix 923
Remix 912 Remix 912
Remix 842 Remix 842
Remix 662 Remix 662
Remix 653 Remix 653
Remix 643 Remix 643
Remix 632 Remix 632
Remix 612 Remix 612
Remix 566 Remix 566
Remix 543 Remix 543
Remix 536 Remix 536
Remix 516 Remix 516
452 452
Remix 443 Remix 443
Remix 422 Remix 422
Remix 433 Remix 433
Remix 412 Remix 412
Remix 406 Remix 406
Remix 346 Remix 346
Remix 252 Remix 252
Remix 242 Remix 242
Remix 233 Remix 233
Remix 223 Remix 223
Remix 113 Remix 113
Remix 996 Remix 996
Remix 906 Remix 906
Remix 873 Remix 873
Remix 823 Remix 823
Remix 836 Remix 836
Remix 816 Remix 816
Remix 866 Remix 866
Remix 796 Remix 796
Remix 783 Remix 783
Remix 773 Remix 773
Remix 762 Remix 762
Remix 753 Remix 753
Remix 743 Remix 743
Remix 733 Remix 733
Remix 722 Remix 722
Remix 716 Remix 716
Remix 692 Remix 692
Remix 686 Remix 686
Remix 606 Remix 606
Remix 373 Remix 373
Remix 973 Remix 973
Remix 852 Remix 852
Remix 682 Remix 682
Remix 672 Remix 672
Remix 393 Remix 393
Remix 383 Remix 383
Remix 362 Remix 362
Remix 326 Remix 326
Remix 356 Remix 356
Remix 296 Remix 296
Remix 286 Remix 286
Remix 276 Remix 276
Remix 266 Remix 266
Remix 196 Remix 196
Remix 183 Remix 183
Remix 173 Remix 173
Remix 163 Remix 163
Remix 152 Remix 152
Remix 143 Remix 143
Remix 136 Remix 136
Remix 133 Remix 133
Remix 126 Remix 126
Remix 123 Remix 123
 
Black-20198 Black-20198
Indianred-20193 Indianred-20193
Mocca-20197 Mocca-20197
Walnut-20195 Walnut-20195
Vegetal Vegetal
 

In order to help you to choose, and to receive samples, do not hesitate to contact us by email: contact@galerie-mobler.com or by phone: 01 43 33 20 12

Your configuration:
Final price (Incl. VAT)
€ 5,106.00 Incl. VAT
Ask a question

Mid-Century Modern PP503 The Chair by Hans Wegner. New product. 'The Round One' as Wegner referred to it with his usual provincial modesty, is perhaps the most famous Danish piece of furniture of them all - which says a bit.

Already a year after the production of this chair startet, it was noticed by the American magazine for design and architecture, 'Interiors'. This turned out to be the beginning of Danish design's great international breakthrough. Yet, Wegner remained rather unimpressed with his own creation 'They could have made this hundreds of years ago - nothing new here' he uttered at several occasions, referring to the basically very traditional construction.

pp503 was designed in 1950 and differs from pp501 by its upholstered seat. PP Møbler's contribution to The Chair has been to improve it in several respects, securing an even longer life of The Chair.

Year 1950
Dimensions Back height: 76 cm. Seat height : 45 cmWidth : 63 cm. Depth : 52 cm
Style Classique
Neuf
Origin Denmark
Fournisseur PP Møbler

Hans J. Wegner

Among Danish furniture designers, Hans J. Wegner (1914-2007) is considered one of the most creative, innovative and prolific. Often referred to as the master of the chair, Wegner created almost 500 in his lifetime – many of them considered masterpieces. His iconic Wishbone Chair is probably the most well-known and has been in continuous production since 1950.

Wegner was part of the spectacular generation that created what is today referred to as ‘the Golden Age’ of modern Danish design. “Many foreigners have asked me how we created the Danish style,” Wegner once said. “And I’ve answered that it was a continuous process of purification and of simplification – to cut down to the simplest possible design of four legs, a seat, and a combined back- and armrest.”

The son of a cobbler, Wegner was born in 1914 in Tønder, a town in southern Denmark. He began his apprenticeship with Danish master cabinetmaker H. F. Stahlberg when he was just 14 years old. Later on, he moved to Copenhagen and attended the School of Arts and Crafts from 1936 to 1938 before setting out as a furniture designer.

In 1938, Wegner was approached by architects and designers Arne Jacobsen and Erik Møller, and started designing furniture for the new Aarhus City Hall. During the same period, Wegner began collaborating with master cabinetmaker Johannes Hansen, who was a driving force in bringing new furniture design to the Danish public at the Copenhagen Cabinetmakers’ Guild Exhibitions.

The core of Wegner’s legacy is his focus on showing the inner soul of furniture pieces through a simple and functional exterior. Wegner’s background as a cabinetmaker gave him a deep understanding of how to integrate exacting joinery techniques with exquisite form. His aesthetic was also based on a deep respect for wood and its characteristics, and a vast curiosity about other natural materials that enabled him to bring an organic, natural softness to formalistic minimalism.

Wegner established his own design studio in 1943 and created a series of lightweight chairs for Carl Hansen & Søn from 1949 until 1968, including the Wishbone Chair, which has been in production at Carl Hansen & Søn ever since.

Wegner is seen as one of the most renowned and creative Danish furniture designers. He received many design awards, including the Lunning Prize in 1951, the Grand Prix of the Milan Triennale in 1951, the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts’ Eckersberg Medal in 1956, Sweden’s Prince Eugen Medal in 1961, the Danish Furniture Prize in 1980, the C. F. Hansen Medal in 1982, and the 8th International Design Award in 1997. He was made an Honorary Royal Designer for industry by the Royal Society of Arts in London in 1959, became an honorary member of the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in 1995, and was awarded an honorary Doctorate by the Royal College of Art in 1997. 

Almost all of the world’s major design museums, from the Museum of Modern Art in New York and Designmuseum Danmark in Copenhagen to Die Neue Sammlung in Munich, exhibit his works. Hans J. Wegner died in Denmark in January 2007, aged 92.